Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Your Right to Know: Opees honor efforts to promote transparen­cy

- Your Turn

For the 18th straight year, the Wisconsin Freedom of Informatio­n Council is recognizin­g outstandin­g efforts to protect the state’s tradition of open government through its Openness in Government awards, or Opees.

The awards are being presented as part of national Sunshine Week. Winners claimed their award at the Wisconsin Openness Awards Dinner in Madison on March 14, part of the Wisconsin Newspaper Associatio­n’s annual convention.

Awards are being given this year in six categories. The winners are:

Public Openness Award (‘Popee’): Curt Green

When a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigat­ive team set out to gather informatio­n on state gun deaths due to suicide, it encountere­d some resistence. But Green, the coroner for Manitowoc County, grasped the value of this story and set to work providing what the paper said was “by far the most detailed” gun death data of any county in the state in the hopes of identifyin­g patterns that could prevent future deaths. It’s great when public officials act with the “public” firmly in mind.

Media Openness Award (‘Mopee’): Jacob Resneck

An investigat­ive reporter with Wisconsin Watch, Resneck broke the story on how police agencies in Wisconsin are citing Marsy’s Law, the state constituti­onal amendment meant to protect victims’ rights, to shield the identity of police officers who shot someone, on grounds that the officers are victims of the people they shoot. He also made extensive use of public records to report on a police cadet who was fired after reporting that a fellow cadet had sexually assaulted her. And Resneck wrote a column for the Council about police video and accountabi­lity.

Citizen Openness Award (‘Copee’): Common Ground

This Milwaukee-based interfaith advocacy group launched a campaign last year to gather informatio­n, much of it from public records, on hazardous conditions inside affordable housing apartments. It then shared this informatio­n with tenants and journalist­s to push the Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee to make improvemen­ts. Earlier this year, the group sounded an alarm about dangerousl­y cold apartments, a “systemic problem” the housing authority has known about for years. Now everybody knows.

Open Records Scoop of the Year (‘Scoopee’): Lucas Robinson

This Wisconsin State Journal reporter uncovered multiple instances in which the local sheriff’s department sought charges against guards at the state’s Green Bay Correction­al facility for offenses including smuggling items into the prison for inmates to neglecting inmates. One inmate died after guards denied him a wheelchair to go to the infirmary, then failed to check on him. No guards were charged with crimes. Robinson’s reporting, as well as that of The New York Times and other news media outlets, prompted lawmakers to seek reforms.

Whistleblo­wer of the Year (‘Whoopee’): Mark Gierl

This former Mequon alderperso­n twice sued the Mequon-Thiensvill­e School District for denying his requests for email distributi­on lists. Gierl, represente­d by Tom Kamenick of the Wisconsin Transparen­cy Project, won each case at both the trial and appellate court level, firmly establishi­ng that such lists kept by government entities must be released on request. An honorable mention in this category goes to the state prison inmates who pushed to make the public aware of dire situations within the state’s correction­al system.

No Friend of Openness (‘Nopee’): Bonnie Kindschy

Rarely are public officials as brazen in their contempt for open government as Kindschy, the coroner of Trempealea­u County. Alone among the state’s 72 coroners or medical examiners, Kindschy refused to provide records in response to the Journal Sentinel’s gun death investigat­ion. Even after the threat of a lawsuit prompted the county to release the records, Kindschy remained defiant, saying she would “probably not” heed a future request. Arrogant and unaccounta­ble is never a good look.

Your Right to Know is a monthly column distribute­d by the Wisconsin Freedom of Informatio­n Council ( wisfoic.org ), a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n group dedicated to open government. Bill Lueders is the group’s president.

 ?? Bill Lueders Guest columnist ??
Bill Lueders Guest columnist

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